Admit It, Facebook Is Awesome

You got a problem with Facebook? Go ahead. Think of what it is. Say it loud and proud. It is probably one of the one thousand or so common complaints listed at the book-length Wikipedia page: Criticism of Facebook. It’s been heard before. A thousand times.

You get the impression that this must be the most hated company in the history of humanity.Every hour, every minute, Facebook stands accused of promoting fake news, swaying whole elections, suppressing news, spying on your face, mining your data, causing divorce, wrecking the meaning of friendship, displaying nudity and not displaying nudity, censoring speech and spreading moral filth, giving voice to Nazism while deprecating the alt-right, ruining careers, fueling envy, causing personal depression, inciting violence, downplaying anorexia, disparaging breastfeeding, promoting extremism, creating opinion bubbles, profiting from Facebook addiction, infringing on intellectual property, giving voice to trolls, tolerating prostitution, inciting anti-semitism and blocking anti-Zionism, enabling harassment, crashing unexpectedly, locking out unpopular opinions, banning certain words, tracking user behavior, skewing the search function, permitting too many accounts to use offensive words, cooperating with despotic governments, sharing too much data, failing to share enough data, not complying with the Americans with Disability Act, being a shill for the CIA, wasting electricity, gobbling up too many servers, permitting advertising fraud, engaging in uncompetitive practices, as well as tolerating and promoting racism, sexism, ageism, religious bigotry, and everything else that some human being somewhere in the planet is against or failing to sufficiently push something that some human being is for.

You read through the list of complaints and conclude: whatever this thing is, humanity has surely faced no greater blight apart from the Black Death. Every complaint is backed by a strange presumption of intentionality. Facebook is a conspiracy to do bad things! Facebook hates x, y, and z, and is working with a, b, and c, on a plot to ruin my life! My life!

Whatever this thing is, humanity has surely faced no greater blight apart from the Black Death.At the very least, you get the impression that this must be the most hated company in the history of humanity. It might, in fact, be just that. And that’s the greatest compliment possible, because, after all, it is also the most successful company in history too. These go together. Everyone has an opinion because everyone is on it.

Okay, not everyone. Just one-fifth of the human race. I have friends who refuse it, and that is their right. But for those on there, it operates as the first global phone book. Individuals are not just a line in a book, as in the old days. The best government could do was dump that gigantic pile of dead trees on your doorstep. Your entry in the private-sector, digital-age version includes everything and anything: your entire life timeline! And get this sci-fi wonder: anyone can do an audio or video call with anyone else.

By the way, just as aside, it’s free, as in no charge. Nada!

The Impossible Possible

Facebook has proven that your attention is the most valuable and commodifiable thing humanity has to offer. How can any company make money this way, providing awesome free stuff to the whole planet? Through many fits and starts, Facebook figured it out. It sells the scarce space on your home feed and sidebars to institutions and individuals who are desperate for eyeballs. And through this tactic, the company now has a market capitalization of a quarter of a trillion dollars.

Not bad for a technology that, in my memory, has been put down, disparaged, denounced, debunked, and dismissed at every single step of the way. And it’s all happened in ten years of public use – a decade to change our very conception of what is and is not valuable in this world. Facebook has proven that your attention – just your eyes and mind space – is the most valuable and commodifiable thing that humanity has to offer.

Ten years ago, no one would have believed it. I can recall speaking at investment forums about Facebook and inspiring derisive laughter by daring to suggest it is actually producing value. Somehow all the smart people in the room had already concluded that this technology was a catastrophically stupid thing that would eventually collapse into a giant heap of absolutely nothing.

It didn’t collapse. Facebook just kept moving from awesome to more awesome. Did you see that you can make a live video to show the world in real time, effectively creating your own television channel for the whole world to watch? I mean, speaking as someone who was born into a world with 3 channels, I find it awesome to live now in a world where every individual has become a producer with global video reach.

So, surely, the critics could stop for a few minutes and express some sense of awe. But no!

All the Troubles in the World

All frenzied theories aside, Facebook is a business, which means it is mainly focussed on endlessly tweaking the user experience to maximize the value that the platform can bring to you and all your friends. This is the only way it can really protect its income stream and keep the competition at bay. It is not a conspiracy; it is a ridiculously subservient digital platform that desperately, constantly, unrelentingly, and slavishly caters to the common person.

Facebook has taught people to take responsibility for their public personas. As for its social impact, Facebook is the leading player for enabling the liberation of communication for the whole of the human family, one person at a time. Think of this: not one profile is exactly like any other. Fully 1.6 billion people are empowered to realize their own unique identities in this space, and communicate in every way possible with everyone else.

Another under-appreciated point: Facebook has taught people to take responsibility for their public personas. You have to curate what people see and not see, how you present yourself, what you want to see and what you do not want to see. This is your responsibility. No one can do it for you. Your mistakes are your own. Your successes are too. In this way, Facebook has taught a whole generation to be better managers of their own lives. Few experiences in history have been as great a classroom for the development of wise and disciplined public behavior.

It has also taught people to better manage their personal networks, and become wiser about navigating the undulating patterns of familiarity and unfamiliarity that characterize life in society. We’ve learned to extract cues from language, post timing, topic, and degrees of separation to discern just how close or far we want another person to our lives. It has taught us to be careful in what we show others, and crystallized a point we only vaguely knew before: we show different parts of ourselves to different sectors of our personal network. We speak differently to parents, pastors, coworkers, and drinking buddies. Yes this can be stressful; it is exactly the kind of stress that we need to become better friends, family members, and workers.

Incredible Bread Machine

Just say it, as much as it might hurt: “Facebook is kind of cool.” Facebook is a kind of society. But whereas in society, no one manages the whole, there are people at the helm of Facebook, people who must endlessly tweak the rules and algorithms that cause the technology to behave in ways that seem natural, normal, and expected. They are not central planners; they are rule makers and rule watchers. The users themselves create the content.

I can only imagine what it must be like to work for Facebook. You know in your heart you are doing good. Your every hope is to make dreams come true. You are living on the technological edge, improving user apps every day. Then you look at the floods of complaints and see the nonstop attacks in the press and, especially, on Facebook itself. It must be demoralizing at some level.

It all reminds me of the old story of “Tom Smith and the Incredible Bread Machine.” Smith creates a machine that makes bread that sells for less than a penny. Humanity is saved! But actually, the government backed by mass opinion turns against him for every possible reason you can imagine, and the machine is shut down.

So, sure, complain about Facebook. It is your right, and, both benevolently and in its own interest, Facebook wants to hear your complaints. But with the other part of your brain, remember to be grateful for the visionaries, workers, investors, advertisers, programmers, and your fellow members of the human race who have worked to make this platform – released to the public a mere 10 years ago – one of the wonders of the world.

A free society is built by you and me, beginning in our own lives. The digital age has given us better tools for doing this than we've ever had before. Become a citizen of the real free world and help us spread the message of liberty. Join Liberty.me today.

Jeffrey A. Tucker is Editorial Director for the American Institute for Economic Research. He is also a managing partner of Vellum Capital, CEO of the Atlanta Bitcoin Embassy, Senior Distinguished Fellow of the Austrian Economics Center in Vienna, Austria, Honorary Fellow of Mises Brazil, adviser to Acton Institute and Mackinac Institute, founder and Chief Liberty Officer of Liberty.me, an adviser to blockchain application companies, past editorial director of the Foundation for Economic Education and Laissez Faire Books, founder of the CryptoCurrency Conference, and author of many thousands of articles in the scholarly and popular press and eight books in 5 languages. He speaks widely on topics of economics, technology, social philosophy, and culture.

The Economics of Life Itself : Beautiful Anarchy is the writing platform of Jeffrey Tucker, in which he covers economics, art, popular culture, and politics from a pro-liberty, anti-state point of view.

I don’t understand the appeal of Facebook. I never have. I created a page years ago when the organizing committee of my high school class reunion suggested that everyone in the class create one. Since then, I’ve followed links there a few times, but now, I can’t seem to follow a Facebook link without signing in, and I don’t remember my password, and I don’t care enough to bother finding or changing it, so I practically never use Facebook.

My attitude is disinterest, not hatred. Facebook is like a hit TV series that I didn’t watch. I expect it to fade away someday like a passing fad, and I have no idea why investors value it so highly. For every minute I’ve spent using Facebook, I’ve spent a hundred minutes, possibly a thousand, literally, using Liberty.me and hundreds more reading antiwar.com and other sites vastly more attractive to me than Facebook.

The web is wonderful, because it enables this diversity, not because one site attracts everyone interested in the minutiae of the lives of their high school classmates. “Following” an old friend or a celebrity is something new, technologically, but Facebook nonetheless exemplifies the least-common-denominator nature of Old Media content, dominated by NBC, CBS and ABC, when “diversity” meant BBC reruns on PBS.

I understand Twitter even less. I’ve never used Twitter, except to read the occasional tweet linked from another site. A communications medium limited to 200 word quips is not remotely attractive to me. How hard Twitter developers work on the service is irrelevant.

They are not central planners; they are rule makers and rule watchers. The users themselves create the content.

These statements describe the Internet Protocols, particularly HTTP (the web protocols), more than they describe Facebook specifically. No one needs Facebook to create a web page and link it to other pages and invite links from other pages. Anyone able to read and write can master basic HTML in an afternoon.

I feel like all the complaints against Facebook listed above are invalid. . . because it’s the people that use it which cause all those problems. They exist on every forum, message board, comment section, and reddit thread on the internet, man! If anything, I can thank FB for funneling it all into one trough for everyone to slop up, and I can sit over here at the table and eat off a plate. 😉

Facebook serves a number of functions for the user depending on who the user is. For myself it is:
1) a way to keep in touch with family and friends, especially our daughter who lives in Australia as well as other relatives in Ontario, Alberta and elsewhere in British Columbia.
2) It has helped me reconnect with old friends and acquaintances from my school days in Quebec, many of whom I had lost contact with.
3) Now that I am retired it keeps me in touch with the people I worked with for forty years.
4) It gives me a connection to many libertarian friends I would not have met otherwise
5) It gives me another connection to friends from a music blog I participate in.
6) It gives me a forum on which to promote my three blogs, The Jolly Libertarian (http://jollylibertarian.blogspot.ca/), The Destinations Guru (http://destinations.guru/) and Now and Then (http://nowandthen.rocks/)
If there is one complaint I have, it is that, with around 500 friends, it is hard to keep up with what everyone posts so I skip a lot of stuff and also limit my time on it. Otherwise I could easily be there for hours on end.
I can see Martin’s point however. If you are only interested in reading libertarian news and libertarian ideas and have no interests outside libertarianism, then yes, liberty.me and antiwar.com and other libertarian specific websites should be your primary focus. I love liberty.me and even promoted it in my blog as an alternative to Facebook for the libertarian community. http://jollylibertarian.blogspot.ca/2016/10/better-than-facebook.html
And I definitely agree with him on Twitter. I have about five or six different Twitter accounts – I had a separate one for each of my blogs, one from work before I retired and a personal one. I hardly ever use any of them. Facebook has a better reach for me than Twitter. I should really close or amalgamate all my Twitter accounts. But for me, Facebook is a community and a way to stay in touch with a wide variety of people.